Whatever restaurant in Melbourne you happen to be the 4 Mile Restaurant & Pub, Chez Michael, or the Heron Rock Bistro, food safety is important. Even if you have the most successful restaurant in all of Melbourne, all it takes is one food handling mistake to seriously damage your business.
The restaurant business is all about repeat customers and public perception of your establishment. Your reputation is everything. If you have even one lawsuit concerning food handling or food preparation mistakes in your kitchen, it can spell disaster- not just for legal defense fees, either. Your reputation could be seriously harmed, even ruined.
You make sure that proper food handling procedures are followed at your restaurant; you need to ensure kitchen staff are well aware of the risks which a case of food poisoning presents to your business. You need to be prepared in the event that health inspectors should decide to drop by for a surprise visit as well. Employees who see improper food handling in your kitchen are also a risk to your business, as they may decide to tell the world what they know if they lose their job.
And there is more to this than simply properly storing food and disposing of waste.
Food preparation areas must be kept clean at all times. While this sounds easy enough, it is very easy to do this wrong. You must use different cutting boards for meat, seafood and vegetables, for instance. Some restaurants use stainless steel surfaces for food preparation - this can dull knives and according to some, impart a hint of metallic flavor to meats. This is harmless, but hardly good for your reputation. Plastic cutting boards are better as they are easy to clean and inherently more sanitary than are wooden cutting boards. After use, each cutting board must be washed thoroughly. For deep cleaning, chlorine bleach can be employed, but make sure to rinse well if bleach is used in cleaning these surfaces.
Utensils need to be washed as well after each meal preparation in which they are used.
To ensure that all harmful bacteria have been killed, meats have to be cooked to a minimum internal temperature - 69 degrees for pork and red meats, 74 degrees for seafood. Even if a customer orders a rare steak, it must be cooked to 69 degrees for at least 15 seconds to reduce the risk of food poisoning. If you have any meats which are not definitely fresh, then you must make sure to prepare them very well done.
Raw foods like sushi call for extreme caution in their preparation. Your kitchen must be perfectly clean, as must your staff. Disposable gloves and hair coverings are needed and the preparation area must be spotless. You should throw away any sushi which is not perfectly fresh - and you should be very certain of the quality of your supplies for sushi.
It’s shocking how many kitchen workers do not constantly wash their hands with soap and water between preparing meals, even if they’ve touched raw meat. Kitchen workers need to wash their hands between every meal preparation, and really it’s a good idea to do quick hand washings between different handlings (such as going from meat to vegetables) during a meal preparation.
Putting a strict food handling system and kitchen sanitation system in place will make sure that your customers will be safe; as will the reputation of your restaurant.

